Cognitive Fusion Questionnaire—Body Image: Psychometric Properties and Its Incremental Power in the Prediction of Binge Eating Severity
2017 (English)In: Journal of Psychology, ISSN 0022-3980, E-ISSN 1940-1019, Vol. 151, no 4, p. 379-392Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
Given the clinical usefulness of the CFQ-BI (Cognitive Fusion QuestionnaireBody Image; the only existing measure to assess the body-image-related cognitive fusion), the present study aimed to confirm its one-factor structure, to verify its measurement invariance between clinical and non-clinical samples, to analyze its internal consistency and sensitivity to detect differences between samples, as well as to explore the incremental and convergent validities of the CFQ-BI scores in Brazilian samples. This was a cross-sectional study, which was conducted in clinical (women with overweight or obesity in treatment for weight loss) and non-clinical samples (women from the general population). The one-factor structure was confirmed showing factorial measurement invariance across clinical and non-clinical samples. The CFQ-BI scores presented an excellent internal consistency, were able to discriminate clinical and non-clinical samples, and were positively associated with binge eating severity, general cognitive fusion, and psychological inflexibility. Furthermore, body-image-related cognitive fusion scores (CFQ-BI) presented incremental validity over a general measure of cognitive fusion in the prediction of binge eating symptoms. This study demonstrated that CFQ-BI is a short scale with reliable and robust scores in Brazilian samples, presenting incremental and convergent validities, measurement invariance, and sensitivity to detect differences between clinical and non-clinical groups of women, enabling comparative studies between them.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Routledge, 2017. Vol. 151, no 4, p. 379-392
Keywords [en]
Assessment, body image, CFQ-BI, obesity and weight-related issues, psychometrics
National Category
Applied Psychology Psychiatry
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-109235DOI: 10.1080/00223980.2017.1305322ISI: 000400291400003Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85017159562OAI: oai:DiVA.org:oru-109235DiVA, id: diva2:1806063
Note
This research work was supported by CNPq (Brazilian National Counsel of Technological and Scientific Development) and FAPERGS (Foundation for Research of the State of Rio Grande do Sul—Brazil). Moreover, the first author has a full PhD. scholarship to study abroad sponsored by CAPES (Brazilian Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel). Also, the second author is supported by a Ph.D. Grant (SFRH/BD/101906/2014) sponsored by FCT (Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology). Finally, the third author is a CNPq fellowship (Research Productivity grant).
2023-10-192023-10-192023-10-27Bibliographically approved